Texas securities regulator alleges in cease-and-desist that Abra crypto lender has been insolvent for months

In an emergency cease-and-desist issued on June 15, the Texas State Securities Board alleged that the Abra crypto lending firm was "insolvent or nearly insolvent" as of interviews conducted on March 31. The filing alleged that Abra and its founder William Barhydt had made investment offerings that were materially misleading, accusing them of securities fraud. Despite not contesting securities regulators' conclusion that Abra was insolvent, Abra repeatedly posted statements on social media such as the one on June 11, where they wrote "Abra is not bankrupt".

According to the complaint, although Abra claimed it stored customer funds with the Fireblocks crypto custodian, they had actually been "secretly transferring assets" to Binance.

The regulator also alleged that Abra had around $30 million in assets with Babel Finance, $30 million with Genesis, and $10 million with Three Arrows Capital — three companies in various stages of liquidation or bankruptcy. They also have $8.8 million with Auros, a firm that was in liquidation but has since exited the process.